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New privacy-focused search engine promises to never sell or store your data

With an increasing number of people concerned by infringements of online privacy and how personal data is stored and used, a new UK-based search engine has launched with the promise that your privacy will never be compromised.

Oscobo, founded by Fred Cornell (ex-Yahoo) and Rob Perin (ex-BlackBerry), aims to capitalize on these growing concerns around how data is shared between services, particularly by advertisers. While all modern browsers now offer a ‘private mode,’ the company says this does little to stop your activity being monitored for re-sale.

In addition to being used to target particular users with ads, Perin says that you could even end up seeing higher prices for certain products, depending on who you are.

“Over months and years a consumers’ personal history both in and out of a number of high profile search engines is tracked to monitor their online activity. This data is then stored, profiled, and sold to advertisers who bombard the consumer with spam, banner ads, and potentially cold calls.

Worse of all it can even increase the online prices of goods and services based purely on who they are perceived to be online.”

To stand out from this crowd of search engines, Oscobo doesn’t store or share any personal data at all, so next time you come back to search, it appears to the site that you’ve never visited before – no tailored results will appear. It doesn’t place cookies or track IP addresses.

That’s not to say it doesn’t have ads, however, they’re just not personalized and targeted at you.